Profile: As a second baseman, "Smooth Like" Satin has enough stick to be interesting. The problem is, the Mets had a chance to try him there and only played him at first base. And Ike Davis owns first base. (Eno Sarris)

Profile: Josh Satin was one of several Mets who got their first extended taste of the show at an advanced age. Satin did show some skills, however. He played both first and third base and displayed gap power and on-base skills. This performance was consistent with the type of production he showed in the minors, where he consistently posted a high doubles rate and an on-base percentage around .400. First base is crowded for the Mets, though both Ike Davis and Lucas Duda have been mentioned in trade rumors, and third base is locked up by David Wright. So, without a position change (he played a good amount of second base in the minors) Satin looks more like a utility infielder and bat off the bench if he remains in Flushing. If he lands somewhere with a path to 400 at-bats, he’d be worthy of consideration in deep leagues, AL-/NL-only leagues, and leagues that count OBP. (Derek Ambrosino)

The Quick Opinion: While there isn’t an exciting ceiling to his game, the 28-year-old Satin appeared to be competent hitter with gap power and above average on-base skills – talents he showed throughout his minor league career. With a logjam at first base and David Wright at the hot corner in Flushing, he’s probably looking at a bench role, though.

Profile: Josh Satin joins a handful of current and former Mets as Triple-A mashers: Satin, Allan Dykstra, Andrew Brown and Mike Jacobs all have weighted on-base averages north of .370, which rank them in the Pacific Coast League top 20. In fact, in 2013, Satin had a top 10 rate with a .411 wOBA, and five of the names above him were Scott Van Slyke, Kole Calhoun, George Springer, Corey Dickerson and Stephen Vogt -- all of whom were important role players this past season. The real issue is his age. Satin will be 30 next year, struggled last year in 43 plate appearances and at best is competing for a Cincinnati Reds' reserve role next year. (Dan Schwartz)

The Quick Opinion: The 30-year-old Satin may find himself in a reserve role for the Reds, but that's not likely to produce fantasy value.